135
D14049.04
JULY 2008
Grey Headline
(continued)
TANDBERG
VIDEO COMMUNICATIONS SERVER
ADMINISTRATOR GUIDE
Introduction
Getting Started
Overview and
Status
System
Configuration
VCS
Configuration
Zones and
Neighbors
Call
Processing
Bandwidth
Control
Firewall
Traversal
Appendices
Applications
Maintenance
Bandwidth Control Overview
The diagram below shows a typical network deployment:
a broadband LAN between the Enterprise and the internet, where high bandwidth calls are acceptable
•
a pipe to the internet (Pipe A) with restricted bandwidth
•
two satellite offices, Branch and Home, each with their own internet connections and restricted pipes.
•
In this example we have created new subzone for each pool of endpoints, so that we can apply suitable limitations to the bandwidth used within and
between each subzone based on the amount of bandwidth they have available via their internet connections.
The TANDBERG VCS allows you to control
the amount of bandwidth used by endpoints
on your network. This is done by grouping
endpoints into subzones, and then applying
limits to the bandwidth that can be used:
within each subzone
•
between a subzone and another subzone
•
between a subzone and a zone.
•
Bandwidth limits may be set on a call-by-call
basis and/or on a total concurrent usage basis.
This flexibility allows you to set appropriate
bandwidth controls on individual components
of your network.
This section describes the different types of
subzones and how to add and configure them,
and explains how to use
Links
and
Pipes
to
apply bandwidth controls between subzones
and zones.
HEAD OFFICE
VCS CONTROL
HOME OFFICE
BRANCH OFFICE
Branch Office
Subzone
Default
Subzone
Pipe A
Pipe B
Pipe C
Home Office
Subzone
INTERNET
Bandwidth Control on the VCS
Example Network Deployment
!
Calls will fail if links are not
configured correctly. You can check
whether a call will succeed, and what
bandwidth will be allocated to it, using the
command
xCommand CheckBandwidth
.
For specific information about how
bandwidth is managed across Peers in
a cluster, refer to the section
Sharing
Bandwidth Across Peers
.